Annual Open Enrollment Period - Section 125
jmarkov
1 Post
I am interested in finding out what other employer's policies are about accepting enrollment forms after the close of the annual open enrollment period.
This year our annual open enrollment period ran 5/13/02 through 6/14/02. Our plan year starts 7/1/02. We have 5,000 benefit eligible employees in a pre-tax section 125 plan.
We have publicized in all of our communications that no enrollment forms would be accepted after 6/14/02 and we would like to stand firm on this, however there are always a few who don't take care of business as they should and ask (sometimes demand) for an exception to be made. Has anyone been legally challenged on not accepting late enrollment forms?
Any comments on this topic would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
This year our annual open enrollment period ran 5/13/02 through 6/14/02. Our plan year starts 7/1/02. We have 5,000 benefit eligible employees in a pre-tax section 125 plan.
We have publicized in all of our communications that no enrollment forms would be accepted after 6/14/02 and we would like to stand firm on this, however there are always a few who don't take care of business as they should and ask (sometimes demand) for an exception to be made. Has anyone been legally challenged on not accepting late enrollment forms?
Any comments on this topic would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
Comments
You are absolutely right. If you allow some people to do this, then you will have to allow every straggler there is to join late and you have a paperwork nightmare!
on getting back in. Some times we can do it ...for example, one female employee dropped her coverage, then became pregnant - that was a lot of work on my part to get her back in. Most of the time, the employee has to wait until next enrollment.
do you ever feel like you will start wiping their noses and tieing their shoe laces next? It is so hard to get people to fill out the simplest of forms sometimes....
One more point: 125 enrollment can never be late. It would appear that the latecomers who slide in within the 30-day grace period would be paying their premiums post tax since they blew a most unforgiving deadline for 125.